Game review: Call of Duty: Black Ops III is slick and modern if a tad familiar
If you are a fan of the Black Ops series, you’ll love the latest instalment. If you're not a fan, well ...


Treyarch

It is difficult to recall now how innovative the original Call of Duty was when it blasted on to the first-person shooter scene in 2003. Dropping players into a series of vast and chaotic second world war battles, it combined cinematic verve with a new sense of being part of a much wider offensive – a small cog in a massive machine rather than the solo gun-toting hero of Doom or Duke Nukem. When Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare arrived four years later, it revolutionised the mainstream multiplayer component, adding killstreaks and XP points, bringing a sense of progression to the previously transitory online experience.
Now in 2015, after a decade of annual iterations, Call of Duty has come to symbolise the deadening cycle of the Triple A video game industry. Every year, a few new features, a graphical overall, some extravagant claims. It’s the same story from Assassin’s Creed to Fifa.